Hey all you calgunners top of the mornin. I had a quick question figured i'd try it on here before going to the gun store. I did a intra family transfer of handguns to an imediate family memeber. We filled out the form and sent it to d.o.j. the transfer went through. Now to sell the guns to a different private party does the new owner have to fill out d.r.o.s info? Or can I still transfer the guns? Myself and my imediate fam memeber are 100% legal to own firearms we just live in oposite areas. Thank you guys in advance and god bless.

If you did an inter-family transfer whoever it went to now owns it. That person is who must do the DROS paperwork if it is to be sold again.

BTW not all immediate family can do inter-family transfers, for example brother to brother is not included but father to son is. But this is mute because you say the paperwork went thru.

__________________The above is not legal advice. It is just something you read from some dude on the internet. It does not reflect the opinion of Calguns.net. If it seems rude it was probably meant to read sarcastically.

BTW not all immediate family can do inter-family transfers, for example brother to brother is not included but father to son is. But this is mute because you say the paperwork went thru.

So this means I can't purchase the Sig P226 Elite Stainless that I really want, from my brother in IL? Dad has passed. Aren't there any other options? This was the only way I could think of buying one.

So this means I can't purchase the Sig P226 Elite Stainless that I really want, from my brother in IL? Dad has passed. Aren't there any other options? This was the only way I could think of buying one.

First up in these situations "purchase" would be the wrong term. Makes it sound like a straw purchase...

Parent/child, grandparent/grandchild, husband/wife only
Note the text in Penal Code 16720. It really means ONLY those relationships, in either direction. Your brother, uncle, cousin or any 'in-laws' are NOT included.
However, in a slightly different operation, husbands and wives can give guns to each other, in an 'operation of law' called 'transmutation' (Family Code 850 The implication here is that firearms are separate, not community property - but why that should be so is not clear; further discussion of community property and related topics is far outside the scope of this article).
A perilous work-around
Brother directly to brother is not legal. Child to parent, parent to other child follows the law.
i. e. Staying entirely within the letter of the law, Abel may accomplish a transfer to his brother Cain by first transferring the firearm to either parent (Adam or Eve), and then the parent would transfer the firearm to their other son, Cain.

Theres always Single Shot Exemption SSE or finding one used private party.

__________________The above is not legal advice. It is just something you read from some dude on the internet. It does not reflect the opinion of Calguns.net. If it seems rude it was probably meant to read sarcastically.